Music Trade Review

Issue: 1926 Vol. 83 N. 22

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
The Music Trade Review
Christmas Club Proving Business Maker
for Ptak's Music Stores in Cleveland
Using the Term Ptak's Musit Lovers' Club, Plan Has Already Brought Considerable Enrollment
—Many Dealers Take Part in Atwater Kent Window Displays
/CLEVELAND, O., November 23.—Ptak's
Music Stores, at 4922 Broadway and 3729
East 131st street, are finding that the Christmas
Club idea is a winner at both of their stores.
They call it Ptak's Music Lovers' Club and it
evidently is appealing to people, as the en-
rollment of members has already reached con-
siderable proportions.
The South East section of Cleveland has
more music stores than any other locality out-
side of the downtown section, and competition
is unusually keen, yet business is reported good
by all stores. The reason for this lies in the
fact that this section is composed of Bohemians,
Slavs and kindred nationalities, all of whom are
great lovers of music. There are literally
dozens of singing and other musical societies
and the entire music trade lend their active sup-
port to them all. The demand is not for cheap
merchandise. Nationally advertised goods have
the preference and several dealers are now
putting in lines of higher grade pianos than
they have carried previously. One of the
largest musical conservatories in this section,
operated by the Hruby brothers, has sixteen
Laffargue pianos that were furnished through
the Maresh Piano Co.
One of the most attractive and also effective
pieces of advertising literature put out by the
Cleveland music trade in some time has just
been issued by the Euclid Music Co. At first
glance it looks just like a savings bank book
with several cheques in it, and this is what it is
supposed to represent. It is, in reality, a four-
page folder and the cover is printed in orange
and black to represent the foregoing descrip-
tion. Inside is printed the proposition the com-
pany has to offer, and it is headed: "A Special
Offer to School Children. This bank book is
worth $2.50 to you." Then follows to the effect
that if they will have anybody call at the store
who wishes to purchase any kind of piano,
phonograph, radio or band instrument and pre-
sent the folder with their name and address
written on it, a special salesman's commission
of 3 per cent will be placed in the Midland
bank in the saving department to the child's
credit. The folders are distributed from house
to house.
An affair known as an Italian Carnival is be-
ing staged this week by the Knights of Co-
lumbus at their new club house and many num-
bers on the daily programs are of a musical
nature. The Knabe Warerooms have furnished
a Fischer Ampico for the occasion, and it is
being used both for accompaniments as well
as for solo work to the enthusiasm of those
who hear it,
A large number of prominent music stores
have entered the Atwater Kent window display
contest that started November 22. On Sunday,
November 21, the Cleveland Plain Dealer car-
ried a special Atwater Kent section and the fol-
lowing music stores had large space in it:
Buescher Music Co., Euclid Music Co., Fraiberg
Music Co., Lipstreu's Music Store, Smerda's,
Wurlitzer's, May's and Bailey's, besides many
other radio dealers.
Ghickering Ampico Grand
for Harvard University
as the completeness of its housing and equip-
ment. It is therefore a significant tribute to
the Ampico that it should be chosen for the
music courses of this institution.
Instrument Purchased by Division of Music of
Noted Cambridge Institution for Use in
Music Appreciation Courses
Harvard University, through its Division of
Music, has recently ordered from the Ampico
Corp. a Chickering Grand Ampico for use in
Harvard Music Division Building
its music classes. The Ampico, which will be
the exclusive reproducing piano of Harvard
University,' was selected by Professor Walter
R. Spalding, the head of the music division,
and will be used principally in Appreciation of
Music Course, conducted by Professor Spald-
ing and Assistant Professor Edward Ballantine.
The Division of Music at Harvard has long
enjoyed an enviable distinction among uni-
versities for the high standards it has main-
tained in scholarship and musicianship, as well
Look for
the
OSCO
Diamond
NOVEMBER 27, 1926
Fall and I am looking forward to a continuance
of good business throughout the Winter
months."
Mr. Williams was headed for the South,
where he will remain for a short time, after
which he will return to the factory in Nor-
walk, visiting the trade in various important
centers.
Sherman, Clay & Go. Report
Record Business for Year
Trade for First Ten Months of 1926 the Best
for Any Ten Months in the History of the
Company—Sales Show $1,000,000 Increase
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL., November 19.—Sherman,
Clay & Co., which issued a report early in
October for the first nine months of the year,
now report one of the best ten months in the
history of this more than fifty-year-old com-
pany.
Net sales for the ten months of the year
are more than $1,000,000 in excess of the same
period last year.
Net profits before Federal income taxes, but
after depreciation, were more than twice an-
nual dividend requirements of the prior pre-
ferred stock, amounting to approximately
$200,000. Since offering of this stock, three
years ago, more than $141,000 par value of stock
has been retired.
The ratio of current assets to current liabil-
ities is in excess of three to one and net current
assets per $100 of prior preferred stock out-
standing is more than $200 per share.
It is believed that business for the remainder
of the year will hold its own with 1925, and
that the company will exceed its greatest year
in the past by a wide margin. The last two
months of each year have always been those
of the greatest sales for the company.
Plans for National Waste
Prevention Contest
Three Shifts Now in
United Corp. Plant
National Lumber Manufacturers' Association
Offers Awards for Best Suggestions Regard-
ing Means for Checking Waste
J. H. Williams Reports Heavy Demand for A.
B. Chase, Emerson and Lindeman Lines
WASHINGTON, D. C, November 23.—The Na-
tional Lumber Manufacturers' Association, with
offices in Washington and in the Conway Build-
ing, Chicago, has just announced final details
for the National Waste Prevention Contest,
which it is conducting, and to which all mem-
bers of the woodworking industries are eligible.
The cash prizes offered this year total $2,000
and include: $1,000 as first prize; $500 as second
prize; three prizes of $100 each, four prizes of
$50. The prime factor to be considered in mak-
ing the awards is the practicability of the plan
suggested and the effect same will have in mini-
mizing or utilizing waste and reducing the cost
of manufacture.
The contest closes March 1, 1927, and prize
winners will be selected by three judges, to be
appointed before that time.
Further details
relative to the preparation of manuscripts for
the contest may be obtained from the National
Lumber Manufacturers' headquarters in Chi-
cago.
I
J. H. Williams, president of the United Piano
Corp., Norwalk, Ohio, was in New York this
week and was very enthusiastic regarding the
progress being made by his company.
"We are now working twenty-four hours a
day at the factory in Norwalk, employing three
shifts," he said. "It is very pleasing to me
to find that the demand for A. B. Chase, Emer-
son and Lindeman pianos equipped with my
tone resonator is constantly increasing. The
first pianos in which this device was installed
were shipped during the Summer and dealers
found them so satisfactory that we have re-
ceived a large number of reorders from the
sections of the country where they were first
shipped.
"We have gotten our manufacturing down
to a point of standardization which is pleasing
our dealers immensely and is naturally saving
a great deal in the cost of production. There
is quite a contrast between the old and the
new methods of manufacturing which are in
operation in our plant. We have, as you know,
made a very thorough study of this and are
now working on some promotion plans which
will be available for the dealer later and I am
sure will make some very interesting sales
propaganda. We have had a most successful
PIANO
SCARFS
PIANO
COVERS and BENCH-CUSHIONS
0. SIMMS MFG. CO.. 103-5 West Utti St.
With Willoughby Go.
J. A. Bechtol, at one time manager of the
small goods department of J. F. Barrow's Music
Store, Painesville, O., has been made manager
of the newly established Willoughby Music
Store, in Willoughby, O.
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th«
OSCO
Diamond
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
The Player Business Is Measured by
Extent of the Roll Business
Per Capita Purchases of Music Rolls, in Comparison With the Numbers of Players in American Homes, Is
Entirely Disproportionate—What Is Wrong With Music Roll Retail Merchandising?—The Fair
and* Justified Complaint Against the Average Retail Dealer in This Direction
ET us do something about the music roll.
The player business, to all intents and pur-
poses, may be measured by the roll busi-
ness. The two, indeed, from the retail view-
point, are simply two aspects of the same
shield, two facets of the same jewel. Precisely
on the day when the merchants wake up to see
that fact, the player business will be reborn
And that is no dream either.
As things stand, however, the whole matter
is no less than a stupid mess. The discussion
in this paper some weeks ago of the per caput
consumption of rolls has only been confirmed
by the figures given out when the Q R S
Music Co. absorbed the United Music Co.
Even if the output of the combined interests
were one-half again as great as it has been of-
ficially stated to be, the annual consumption of
music rolls per player-piano owner would still
be excessively small. And until that per caput
consumption has been doubled, at the least, the
player business will not be a profitable busi-
ness.
All this has nothing to do with the two manu-
facturing companies above mentioned, which
are now combined into one, or with any other
maker, of music rolls. The bulletin columns of
The Review show that music-roll manufacture
goes on, and that there is profit in it. But what
does really matter is that the dozen or so mil-
lions of music rolls turned out annually by all
of these concerns become very insignificant
when they are distributed among the thousands
of dealers who sell musical merchandise. And
when, still farther, the distribution has been
secondarily completed, among the ultimate con-
sumers, the per caput figures become positively
distressing. In other words, the manufacturers
ought to be turning out at least twenty-five
millions of music-rolls per year. If we should
say that every owner of a player-piano ought
to buy one new roll a week, we should be stat-
ing what is no more than evident, if indeed the
player-piano is to the average owner what we
know it could and should be. But if every
owner of a player-piano bought one roll a
week, the annual output would be several times
twenty-five millions per year.
The "No Demand" Argument
Now we know that the per caput consump-
tion is less, terribly less, than this. And when
we stop to ask ourselves why this should be
so, we are compelled to say, first, that the
dealers do not try to sell music-rolls; and sec-
ond, that the owners do not know how to get
from their players anything like as much in
the way of amusement and entertainment as
they would if they knew how.
Why don't the dealers try to sell music-rolls?
What is wrong with music-roll selling? The
answer is likely to be that there is not suffi-
cient public demand for music-rolls to warrant
the dealer making a serious effort to sell them.
But to that again the answer is that the dealer
can hardly expect the people to-develop de-
mand on their own account, and then to walk
in and insistently beg for music-rolls. The
merchant in the clothing line certainly does not
wait for the public to walk in, but rather in-
duces the public to enter by constant and at-
tractive advertising. And the same is true of
all similar lines of merchandise. Only in the
music business, it seems, do the merchants be-
lieve that a line of merchandise should be self-
L
selling. And only in the music business do we
find merchants complaining that an article of
necessity does not sell, that there is no de-
mand for it.
Article of Necessity!
Article of necessity? Certainly! For every
owner of a player-piano surely a collection of
music-rolls is a necessity. Perhaps not so
quantitatively as gasoline to an automobile, for
though a music-roll is as necessary as gasoline,
one music-roll may be used for the same me-
chanical purpose just so long as it holds to-
gether. Yet qualitatively it is just the same
in both cases. Moreover, if the player business
is to expand and to make itself big and im-
portant year by year in something like a fair
ratio to the increase of the population, certainly
there must be a large, a very large, increase in
the sale of music-rolls. For if the present per
caput consumption continues to be the miser-
able thing it is to-day, the player business will
steadily and rapidly decline into insignificance,
reaching that undesirable position within half
a dozen years.
The Fair Complaint
Does this sound like undue pessimism? Then
consider the facts. The fair complaint against
music merchants is that they will not treat
their business with anything like due respect.
How on earth can a business be expected to
grow while the retail men are heard say-
ing that somehow or other the public is slow
to buy, while the one obvious method of re-
taining old customers and creating new ones is
being neglected, if not actually treated with
contempt? That is a fair question, and the
negative answer which alone can be given to
it assures us that the complaint is fair also.
There has got to be a change, a very con-
siderable and deep change, a change in fact of
heart. Merchants have got to be educated all
over again on the question of music-rolls. The
present writer can remember how big depart-
ment stores found it good business to carry
music-rolls by the thousands and to maintain
departments, employing a dozen salespeople, in
the day of the old sixty-five note player with
all its imperfections. Now to-day we have the
eighty-eight-note player and roll, we have the
recorded roll, and we have the reproducing
piano as well as the eighty-eight-note pedal
player. Now why should there to-day be less in-
stead of more interest in roll buying? It simply
cannot be said with any truth that the people
are not interested in music, or in the piano. The
merchant who says that knows that his own
piano store is a standing contradiction to the
very notion. And the only satisfactory answer
is that in the music business we have hardly
any merchandisers, even if we do have a great
many merchants. There is very evidently a dif-
ference, a vast difference, between merchants
and merchandisers, between men who merel)
keep store and men who sell goods.
Well, the music merchants can sell grand
pianos, reproducing as well as straight. Why
cannot they sell music-rolls? The answer is
that they can sell them. But they have got
themselves into bad habits, into habits which
must be broken before there can be any im-
provement. The music-roll department must
come back. There must be a revival of sales-
manship in music-rolls, and a revival of dem-
onstration too. These things are not merely
necessary, they are vital. Music-roll salesman-
ship and merchandising must come back.
Henry Dreher Strong for
Blind Piano Tuner Wins
Trade Promotional Work
Success as a Dealer
A. J. Peters, Although Sightless, Found Indoor
Work Too Monotonous, So Branched Out
Into the Piano Selling Field
Cleveland Dealer in First Visit to New York
for Over a Year Tells of What His House Is
Doing to Promote Interest in the Piano
Mr. PLEASANT, MICH., November 20.—A report
Henry Dreher, president of the Dreher Piano
that the Peters Music Co., of this place, had Co., Cleveland, O., accompanied by Mrs.
opened a branch in Alma, Mich., was premature, Dreher, was a visitor to New York this week
having arisen from sales of pianos and players for the first time since his illness, which con-
made in and around Alma by the Peters Music fined him to his home for some months. Mr.
Co.
Dreher is fast regaining his health and seems
The success of A. J. Peters, the proprietor of much of his old self when visiting the various
the Peters Music Co., is at once interesting and manufacturers whose products his company
' inspirational. He became totally blind twenty- represents in Cleveland, among them Steinway
seven years ago and entered the Michigan & Sons and the Aeolian Co.
School for the Blind to learn piano tuning.
Mr. Dreher is particularly interested in the
Then he became a tuner in a piano factory and promotional work being carried on and planned
successfully held it for three years, but the in the interests of the piano. In addition to
monotony of the work and his native energy subscribing generously to the support of the
and courage inspired him to change. He then work, the Dreher Piano Co. has caused to be
represented the Cable Company as a salesman painted on a number of barns in the vicinity
for thirteen years in central Michigan, work- of Cleveland large signs bearing the slogan
ing from their Saginaw store.
"Make Your Home Musical — Buy a Piano."
On August 1 he decided to go into business No name is placed on the sign, it being felt
for himself and secured the agency for the Chase that whatever buying interest is developed
Bros, piano in his section. He received the through means of the signs will turn in part
first one on August 15 and since that time has to the Dreher store.
sold thirteen Chase Bros, players and three up-
Other Aeolian Hall visitors during the week
rights to his local public. He has done a good included W. H. Daniels, of Denton, Cottier &
deal of service work in addition and has excel- Daniels, Buffalo, N. Y., with Mrs. Daniels, and
lent prospects for a steadily increasing profit- John Huber, general manager of the company,
able trade.
and Alexander Steinert, of M. Steinert & Sons.

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